A tour of Addiewell Oil Works in 1902

How the shale was mined and processed

The document attached at the foot of this page gives a detailed description of the Addiewell Oil Works in 1902. At that date, Young’s company employed 600 men there, and another 400 in the surrounding shale mines that supplied the oil works.

The article appeared in the West Lothian Courier of 5 December 1902, and is the report of a visit to the Oil Works. The writer describes the processes that turned hard black shale into oil, sulphate ammonia, naphtha, candles and many other products:

Shale is mined

Shale is taken by mineral railway to the oil works

Shale is crushed in the ‘breakers' into fist-sized pieces

Crushed shale is put into hutches (small wagons)

Shale is taken to the top of the retorts

Shale is tipped into the retorts (furnaces)

Shale is heated up to high temperature until the crude oil, ammonia water and gases run off

Spent (waste) shale, now turned red by the heat, is tipped onto the bing

The crude oil is refined (cleaned of impurities) by repeated distillations

By-products such as sulphate of ammonia are processed Paraffin wax is made into candles

Mention is made in the article of an earlier article describing the retorting and refining process. This was in a similar article on the Broxburn Oil Works, which appeared in the Courier of 21 November 1902. This article can be seen at or ordered from the Local History Library, County Buildings, High Street, Linlithgow, EH49 7HE. Tel. 01506 282491. localhistory@westlothian.gov.uk.uk .

Downloads

A visit to Addiewell Oil Works in 1902 (104k)
This article in the West Lothian Courier of 5 December 1902 describes the whole process that shale went through from mining to refining - and there's also a detailed report of candlemaking.

I consent to my name and e-mail address being stored along with this comment, and to the website editors communicating with me by e-mail about the comment if necessary. My name may be published alongside the comment on the website, but my e-mail address will not be published. My information will not be shared with any third party (see our privacy statement).